Drugi jezik na kojem je dostupan ovaj članak: Bosnian
Source: TheDrum
Saatchi & Saatchi has created an immersive, 3D hand-made insert to promote Toyota’s new Camry, mixing print with some high tech. The tech included in the stunt required assistance from dimensional print marketing firm Structural Graphics, as well as eight months of research, development, engineering of paper and electronics, bespoke technology and functionality.
50,000 of these inserts were created, by hand, and modeled off of the interior of the Camry. A gatefold was assembled in a layered 3D effect, and included wiring and batteries to make the experience come to life. Subscribers of the women’s lifestyle magazine InStyle recieved these inserts in its March issue.
Users put their thumbs on the metallic door sensors in order to open the insert. Once engaged, a leather scent is activated. Those tabs measure your heart rate and send the data to a monitor in the audio console that registers the heartbeat with accompanying LCD lights and sounds.
“Will it immediately and viscerally make people feel what it’s like to drive the new Camry?” was the main thought Saatchi creative director Marc D’Avignon and his team approached this task with. “Then, we started asking questions. Words and pictures are great, but how do we engage more senses? How do we immerse people? How do we make print feel interactive? How do we put people behind the wheel? How can they touch the dashboard? Smell the leather? Experience the excitement?”
“Print is going through its own technological revolution,” he said. “So, what’s possible continues to change. So if we ask more of ourselves when we engage with it, print is absolutely able to respond to the challenge.”